theoldwizard1
Well-known member
My conclusion? Two bad GFCIs.
Who believes me?
Hard to believe, 2 bad GFCIs, Try taking them back to the store or contact the manufacturer.
My conclusion? Two bad GFCIs.
Who believes me?
Hard to believe, 2 bad GFCIs, Try taking them back to the store or contact the manufacturer.
My conclusion? Two bad GFCIs.
Who believes me?
I do ... for now. Until you post that you move problems.
Question to the real sparkies following this thread: Other than putting a GFCI into a known good circuit and seeing whether it will reset or not ... is there a way to bench test a GFCI?
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Who believes me?

Unfortunately I do and I don't. I made a post earlier in this thread about how I had a box of 3 fail over 1 or 2 years.
I don't believe you because I think your house is haunted and that you're telling us this under duress.


Haha.. Could be true. Maybe it is built on an indian burial ground?
That being said, I am glad this thread happened because I learned a **** ton about basic house wiring and electrical.
So thank you all for your help
And thank you to the douche bag at home depot that dropped the box of GFCIs and created this mess. Well done sir!!!!![]()
OK so I think I figured out what is wrong.
I pulled the GFCI and I found that there are 4 wires coming in. 2 from the "line" and 2 from the "load".
However, I noticed that the hots from the line were in "line" and the neutrals were in "load". So it was miswired. I correct that and put the both hots and neutrals from line in line and tested. And sure enough, 120 V from line.
PLUS, the GFCI is bad.
So I think the GFCI is bad plus it was miswired and that would explain the weird voltage readings downstream correct?
